short version: take reflected readings from a uniform surface - preferably, a gray card - and see if your camera gives the same reading as your Sekonic L-308s. Be sure to get in close when taking the readings - but not so close to cast shadows on the gray card. You don't want either the camera or the L-308 to see anything outside of the edges of the gray card. If you don't have a gray card, open up something like a cereal box and use the unprinted side of that. If you are just comparing the camera to the Sekonic, it won't matter if the reflective surface is 18% or not. But if you want to use the Sunny 16 rule to confirm the Sekonic reading, then an 18% gray card card is recommended.
too long don't read:
My Sekonic L 308S Flashmate gives the same reflected reading from my Delta brand gray card as it does when used as an incident meter. I am lucky enough to have a second hand-held meter - a Gossen Luna Lux* - and it matches the Sekonic L-308, both reflected and incident. So for me, if my camera meter gives me the same reading from the gray card as either of my two hand-held meters, then I figure the camera meter is accurate. One of my two Pentax MX cameras does match the hand-held meter readings, the other one is about 1/2 stop different. For that camera, I adjust the ISO dial until it gives the same reading from the gray card as the others.
I also have a couple of Fuji digital cameras. I have not done enough testing to really know how the digital cameras compare to the hand-held meters and the two Pentax film cameras - but in some quickie tests, the digital cameras were somewhat anomalous. Until I can do more testing and research, I am not using the digital cameras to test the meters on my film cameras. There may be some differences in how the ISO standard is implemented by different digital camera manufacturers which might explain the differences I think I'm seeing - but I have not done enough research to understand it.
Personally, the Sunny 16 rule does not work that well for me. Under conditions that should give me a Sunny 16 reading, I usually get something closer to f/11. Then again, my cameras do not have a 1/100 sec shutter speed, so maybe the fact that I am using 1/125 sec is a factor?
* outside of the US, the Gossen Luna Lux may be known as the Lunalight